People v. Whitson

154 P.2d 867, 25 Cal. 2d 593, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 342
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1944
DocketCrim. 4581
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 867 (People v. Whitson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Whitson, 154 P.2d 867, 25 Cal. 2d 593, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 342 (Cal. 1944).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

The defendants, Benjamin H. Whitson and Thomas Earl Brigance, were jointly charged with the murder of Police Officer George C. Haas, in the first count of an information. They were charged with the robbery of the cashier of the Oaks Club, a card club, situated near the corner of Park Street and San Pablo Avenue in Emeryville, in the second count of the information. The defendant Brigance was also charged with a prior conviction of the crime of second degree murder in the State of Missouri, which he admitted upon arraignment. Whitson, a baker in the navy, is the brother-in-law of Brigance, who was employed in the Richmond shipyards. In a joint trial by jury, each defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree without recommendation, and each was convicted of robbery in the first degree. The death penalty was imposed upon the first count, and life imprisonment in the state penitentiary upon the second count. Thereafter a motion for a new trial as to each count of the information was denied by the trial court. By virtue of the provisions of section 1239 of the Penal Code, an automatic appeal was taken to this court from the judgments and from the order denying a new trial.

A strong case against the defendants was presented by the prosecution. Anthony Davilla, a taxicab driver employed by the Yellow Cab Company, chief witness for the prosecution, positively identified at the trial the two defendants, Whitson and Brigance, as the men who had committed the robbery of the Oaks Club on March 8, 1944, and Whitson as the man who had shot and killed Officer Haas with a machine gun when Officer Haas accosted them as they were leaving the scene of the crime. Davilla testified that at about 1:00 a. m. in the early morning of March 8, 1944, he was stopped in front of the Sears Roebuck store on Telegraph Avenue near 27th Street in the city of Oakland by a man whom he later identified as Brigance. Another man whom Davilla identified as Whitson got into the back seat with Brigance, slammed the door, and said, “Down Town.” The men directed Davilla to drive to 12th Street and Broadway, and from there down 12th Street to Grove Street toward Emeryville. As they drove down Telegraph Avenue, Davilla turned around to talk to the men, who were not then masked. *596 Although there were no lights lit in the cab, the lights on the street corners were lit, and there were lights from streetcars. After driving about. three blocks on Grove Street, Davilla heard something crash against the glass partition dividing the driver’s compartment from the passengers’ compartment, and the man whom he later identified as Whitson, who had a “long object” in his hand, said, “Keep your hands upon the wheel. Keep driving or else I will cut you in two. Keep your hands up where I can see you.” Davilla kept driving until they finally stopped on Park Street about 50 or 100 feet from San Pablo Avenue. The two men then tied masks over their faces. Whitson used some kind of black material and covered his face to his eyes. The man identified as Briganee used a narrow piece of white cloth. The man identified as Whitson had in his hands a gun resembling a Thompson 45-caliber sub-machine gun called a “Tommy Gun” of the kind used in the navy. The two men then compelled Davilla to get into the back compartment, and Briganee tied his legs with a towel. Briganee tried to tie Davilla’s arms securely with Davilla’s own belt but was not able to do so satisfactorily. They, therefore, untied him, and ordered him to get out on the sidewalk. They then marched him ahead of them into the Oaks Club on San Pablo Avenue a few feet from Park Street. As they entered, the man identified as Whitson covered the card players in the club with his sub-machine gun, while the man identified as Briganee entered the cashier’s cage, which was situated to the right of the entrance, and took the money which amounted to approximately $300. While this was happening, one of the card players spoke up and said, “They won’t shoot,” at which time the man with the machine gun said, “You think I won’t”; and fired several shots into the ceiling and wall. The man whom Davilla later identified as Briganee then said, “Come along with me,” and they went out of the club, leaving the man with the machine gun behind. Pour or five feet from the entrance, they passed Officer Haas, a special police officer, who asked, “What is going on here? What is wrong here?” They continued on their way, and a few moments later Davilla thought he heard two or three shots. When they reached the taxi, the motor of which had been left running, the man identified as Briganee said, “Get behind the wheel of that cab.” The man was carrying his hand in his *597 pocket as though carrying a gun, and Davilla climbed in behind the wheel. The man with the machine gun then came along, got into the cab, and ordered Davilla to make a “U” turn. After driving two or three blocks north on San Pablo, the man identified as Whitson said, “Get this thing moving. I had to lay that copper low.” Following the directions of the two men who had taken off their masks, Davilla drove them to the point where he had originally picked them up and into the private driveway alongside the Sears Roebuck store. There the two men got out. Davilla immediately drove to the City Hall in Oakland where he reported the crime to the police and gave them a description of the two men. Davilla testified that the holdup man with the machine gun had on a dark coat and dark blue pants, and wore a light hat. His height was about 5 feet 7 inches; he was wearing a mustache, had black eyes, and had a growth of beard. The other man was a man with blond hair, and wore a pair of khaki-colored, dark tan breeches, and a faded blue shirt, and wore no coat or hat. While Davilla was at the City Hall, an officer examined the cab and found a magazine or clip loaded with 45 automatic cartridges on the rear seat. Davilla, later the same night, gave a description of the men to the Emeryville police. On his way to the hospital, Officer Haas died from shock and hemorrhage due to three bullet wounds.

Two boys testified that several days subsequent to March 8, 1944, they found a Thompson sub-machine gun dismantled and several clips of cartridges cached under and near a garage platform in the rear of the First Presbyterian Church at 26th Street and Broadway in Oakland. A ballistic expert testified at the trial that in his opinion the bullets which had killed Officer Haas had been fired from that gun. The Brigance home was on 27th Street between Telegraph Avenue and Grove Street, Oakland, a half-block from the Sears Roebuck store, and was one block from the place where the machine gun was found by the boys.

The cashier of the Oaks Club, Walter Whalen, described the man with the machine gun as being about 5 feet 7 inches or 5 feet 8 inches tall, slender in build, and weighing about 140 pounds. He was wearing a hat and a dark raincoat or “some type of slicker.” The man who went into the cashier’s cage was about an inch taller than the other man; his hair was brown or a “dirty blond,” and he had on a light shirt and *598 light pants, and wore neither hat nor coat, Whalen testified that about thirty persons were present in the Oaks Club at the time of the holdup and that about $400 had been taken from the cashier’s cage. He also testified that the sub-machine gun found by the boys, and an exhibit in court, was similar to the gun used in the holdup.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 P.2d 867, 25 Cal. 2d 593, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-whitson-cal-1944.